Harvey Causes Widespread Devastation

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The scale of the catastrophe hitting southeast Texas and parts of Louisiana has residents struggling to protect their lives and property, as up to 50 inches of rain is forecast to hit some areas in the wake of Hurricane Harvey this week.

For a sign of the conditions in Houston and nearby areas, consider this: The U.S. Coast Guard says it's "conducting urban search and rescue in the city of Houston."

Here's a rundown of what Texas residents have told NPR and its member stations about the hurricane, the massive amount of rain it brought, and the floodwaters that have taken over roads and neighborhoods:

"I'm overwhelmed of all that's going on and not knowing if my home is going to be there; if my dad is OK — it's just ... I don't know what to say." — Shirelle Franklin, who fled Victoria, a town between Houston and Corpus Christi.

In Rockport, where Harvey made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane, many residents stayed, despite a mandatory evacuation order.

"When locals found the doors of a local elementary school unlocked, they set up their own shelter," NPR's Rachel Martin reports.

Rachel spoke to Mashon Hunt, 17, who grew up in Rockport and went to the shelter with her 8-month-old daughter and her mother. Hunt helped the makeshift shelter provide the care for an estimated 250 people, before leaving for another shelter in Austin.

"I'm very tired," Hunt told Rachel. She says that while the school had cots, there wasn't much food at first, so they instituted a rationing system. And some of the people who came in also needed oxygen.

"It was kind of a tight squeeze until we could actually do anything," Hunt said. She says she and her friends "came together as one and we started helping people come in, and make sure they had what they needed, that they were calm. And it's crazy, but it worked."

Hunt doesn't know how her home fared. As of Monday, she said: "The conditions here are really good right now. Me and my daughter and my mother are good. We have a place to stay and sleep. Having food and such great staff here — you know, it's a blessing just to come here and know that we were safe and taken care of."

Fulton: The eye of the hurricane passed over the fishing village that's on the edge of Rockport. Nelda Salazar, who owns the Fulton Harbor Bait Stand with her husband, Long Win, told NPR's John Burnett:

"The first wave we were fine, we only had this little piece of roof off. But after the eye, the second wave — it tore it up a lot more. We have a back wall completely missing."

John reports, "Their shrimp boat floated away; a 7-foot storm tide swamped their mullet and croaker tanks and everything else in this wooden shack perched on the water's edge."

Salazar says: "We're grateful that we've got something to fix up. Other people doesn't have nothing to fix. I mean, they've gotta go from the bottom up. We actually have a floor, we got a few walls. We got a boat that's floating up. I mean, we can fix these."

Nassau Bay: Southeast of downtown Houston,Geraldine Mason, 70, heeded evacuation orders and moved to a hotel. Mason lives near a marina, in an area that's also home to NASA's Johnson Space Center.

NPR's Jeff Brady reports, "On Sunday she went back and couldn't even reach her house there was so much water in the neighborhood. But she said she's happy she left before the storm."

"Because we would have no way of getting out, in either direction," Mason said with a laugh. "Because as you can see we are right across the street from the bay, so — you know, our faith will just get us through it. It is what it is."

The Coast Guard says it's carrying out rescue and relief work using 18 helicopters and nine flood punt teams. It also warns residents who are desperate to get away from life-threatening water: "Don't go into your attic. Rescuers from air can't see you. Get to high ground; mark your roof."

Upcoming Events

The Retro Cocktail Hour's Cinema a Go-Go series returns to Liberty Hall with a night of extraterrestrial bad guys! Our big double feature has two of the original "alien invasion" movies of the early 1950s, including Howard Hawks' production of the original The Thing From Another World (1951) and low budget auteur Edgar G. Ulmer's The Man From Planet X(1951).

Will Earth survive? Join us and find out at Cinema a Go-Go - and be sure to enter our intermission giveaway when we'll be handing out all manner of otherworldly goodies from the RCH Warehouse.

Join us at Liberty Hall in downtown Lawrence, Friday, October 20. Tickets are $8, available at the doors, which open at 6:30 p.m.

You can buy reserved seats on the floor, either as a table of 10 ($300), a table of 4 ($120), or individual reserved seats ($30). Seating in the balcony is general admission and run $20 a ticket. The dance floor will be open to balcony and floor seating. A service charge may be added to your order. Tickets are available at the Liberty Hall box office or ticketmaster.com. Tickets will also be available the night of the concert. The Liberty Hall ticket office is cash only.

Ron Gutierrez joins the fun again this year. His rich, soulful vocals and vast repertoire have led to performances alongside such artists as Michael McDonald, Wynonna Judd, Rita Moreno and B.B. King, as soloist with The National Symphony Orchestra and during national television appearances on such shows as “Showtime at the Apollo” and numerous PBS concerts.

Kathleen Holeman has been performing for more than 20 years as a solo act, sideman and leader of jazz groups of all sizes. She’s led the Ray Alburn Big Band since June 2007. She’s been a private music teacher for 20 years and on the faculty at Missouri Western State University since 2008.

Formed in 2003, the Kansas City Jazz Orchestra brings many of the region's greatest jazz musicians together to perform big band jazz in a concert setting. The KCJO is under the direction of Clint Ashlock, Kansas City native and trumpeter.

Description: Celebrate the launch of the sun and her flowers, the long awaited second collection of poetry from Rupi Kaur, the No. 1 New York Times bestselling author of milk and honey. Rupi Kaur’s new softcover the sun and her flowers and one admission ticket is included with each Admission Package Purchase. Admission packages are $28.50 plus applicable fees, and go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday, September 15. Tickets will be available through the Kauffman Center Box Office at (816) 994-7222, via the Kauffman Center mobile app, or online at www.kauffmancenter.org. Kaur views her life as an exploration of that artistic journey. She published her first collection of poems, milk and honey, in 2014. The internationally acclaimed collection sold well over a million copies, gracing the New York Times bestsellers list every week for over a year. It has since been translated into over thirty languages. Kaur’s long-awaited second collection, the sun and her flowers, will be released in October 2017. Through this collection Kaur continues to explore a variety of themes including love, loss, trauma, healing, femininity, migration and revolution. The event is presented in partnership Andrews McMeel Universal and Rainy Day Books. More information and tickets: http://tickets.kauffmancenter.org/single/eventDetail.aspx?p=12966 Submitted by: Eliza Scott Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts